In the school cafeteria, Arthur talks about how, when things happen, we wonder if it will turn out good or bad. He gives examples such as in baseball, where you might get a home run, or be thrown out at first base. Or when it's lunchtime at the cafeteria- will it be pizza being served, or will it be mystery meat? Arthur says so far, things are going well. Just then, much to Arthur's concern, Mr. Haney makes an announcement over the P.A. system, asking for Arthur to report to his office.
It turns out that the reason Arthur as asked to go to Mr. Haney's office was because the principal had an envelope for Arthur to give to his mom. Arthur's friends wonder what's in the envelope, since Mr. Haney said nothing about what was in it. The kids all assume it is something bad, and Francine suggests that Arthur must be in trouble, though Buster says this may not be the case. Then Francine and Buster have a tug-of-war with the envelope until Binky grabs it and says, "I bet you failed Ratburn's big history tests." Then Francine assumes that Arthur will have to go to summer school. In a fantasy, we see Arthur at his desk with stacks of textbooks while Mr. Ratburn enjoys an ice cream. Arthur watches a tornado outside his window. In his fantasy, Francine has Pal on her bike, Brain and Buster go camping in the woods, and Muffy and Prunella roller skate down the block. Buster reappears (this time, as a swimmer) and says that those who don't pass their history tests are doomed to repeat it. The fantasy ends with Arthur's school crashing into the ground below.
Arthur is worried about the contents of the envelope, thinking that it's about him, so he tries to come up with a way to give it to Jane without her opening it. Francine suggests running it through the wash and letting her find it there, while Brain suggests dropping it into a storm sewer, where the many water passageways of the world would send it all the way to China. Arthur disagrees with all of these bizarre ideas and decides to handle it himself. At home, he is feeding Pal, but is so wrapped up over the envelope that he repeatedly fails to give Pal any food or water, much to Pal's annoyance. Arthur then leaves the envelope out in the open on the kitchen table, just in time for D.W. to barge in asking what it is. Arthur pretends it's nothing and tells her to leave, causing D.W. to get in his face until he admits that it's just an envelope the principal wanted him to give Jane. D.W. immediately declares that Arthur's in trouble and tells their Mom, who comes home from work, but she is too distracted to acknowledge the envelope. She finally feeds Pal and while D.W. continues to egg on Arthur, Jane sifts through the mail while talking on the phone, absentmindedly throwing most of the mail into the garbage along with the envelope. Arthur is relieved that he is in the clear.
At dinner, Arthur is still distracted and D.W. continues to annoy him over it. That night while watching T.V. with David, Arthur decides to go to bed early and tries hard to sleep, even though he still feels guilty about not giving the envelope to Jane. That night, he has a nightmare that the envelope is violently shaking in the garbage, so Arthur pulls it out and discovers it has grown even larger, and he tries stuffing it under the sink, to no avail. It continues to grow and Arthur tries hiding it in the shower, where it continues to grow rapidly. Arthur panics and urges his Mom, who woke up to check on him, to get out of the house, just before the envelope rips through the roof and towers into the night sky. It then opens up to reveal D.W., who yells "Didn't you tell Mom yet?!" Arthur wakes up to find D.W. at the foot of his bed asking the same question, eager to see if he gets in trouble or not.
Desperate to relieve his anxiety, Arthur decides to just give Jane the envelope. He finds her in the den going through tax documents and explains to her that he didn't give her the envelope because he was afraid he was in trouble and that she'd be mad. Jane, however, is not the least bit mad and finally takes a look at the envelope, which she is happy to finally receive because she had been unable to reach Mr. Haney the entire day. It is revealed that the envelope was full of Mr. Haney's tax documents, and had nothing to do with Arthur at all. Jane asks Arthur if he really thought the whole thing was about him, and he laughs it off saying he didn't, relieved that the air is finally clear. His mom explains that she needs to know if Arthur's ever got anything bothering him so that she and David can help him whenever he needs them. Happy that everything is okay, Arthur goes back to bed, only to have D.W. pester him and ask what sort of "punishment" he faced, which he just brushes off as he heads upstairs.
[Seas of Infinity. Length: 14:25] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music][Seas of Infinity] [Music] [Music] Galaxies, constellations, stars, planets [Music] [Music] [Music] The universe appears to be infinite, but starting from his tiny dot in one corner of the Milky Way, man is beginning his conquest of it. [Music] After his first trial steps, he will one day walk the Moon. We can marvel at such exploits, even as we realize the chances are slight that man will venture personally beyond his own solar system. It is a long way to the stars. One of the slenderest things on our small planet is spider silk. That's why these fine threads are used for crosshairs in delicate optical instruments to study the stars. Spider silk is so fine, that one pound would circle the Earth. To reach Alpha Centauri, the nearest star beyond the Sun, would require one half-million tons of silk. Enough to fill a train 150 freight cars long. Only by the science of astronomy can we leap across this vastness, and, by our eyes, and with special scientific instruments, analyze the elements and atomic structure of distant suns. The sole source of knowledge of objects beyond our solar system is electromagnetic radiation. When the spectroscope was invented, we found we could analyze matter by its radiation. Every chemical element creates a unique set of special lines that we can compare with others. Thus, we can deduce that the entire universe is made up of elements similar to some of those we find on Earth. We see some radiations as colors. But despite the fact that we receive almost all our knowledge through our eyes, the visible spectrum is a narrow one. We might see many new colors if we could see into other wavelengths, such as radio waves, infrared, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays. And the light invisible to us can tell us much about the mysteries of space. Already, this invisible light has led us to a new understanding of the universe, and provided unsuspected puzzles for our solution. The envelope of air which protects life on Earth also screens out, or absorbs, the starlight in this portion of the spectrum. And it is these invisible radiations that could one day tell us how stars are born and die. And how the universe was created. For Earth-bound astronomers, the challenge is tantalizing. Telescopes on brief rocket flights have brought us hints of entities we never knew existed. And balloon flights have lifted telescopes 8 miles into the air, to take some of the clearest photographs of the Sun ever obtained. From Earth-bound views like this, to this. Yes, it is beyond the air that we must go if we seek a clearer image of the heavens. Above distortion that makes the stars twinkle, above the blotter of air that absorbs the ultraviolet, the X-rays, the gamma rays, on which much of the study of starlight depends. We need a solid platform, hundreds of miles out in space, from which to make our studies. Not a rocket, not a balloon, but an orbiting astronomical observatory, and that is what has been developed by scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center, where Dr. James Kupperian headed a group of distinguished astronomers. To know the stars, we must capture starlight, light that is cut off forever from human eyes on Earth. For this, we need special telescopes. There are such telescopes, and here is Dr. Arthur D. Code who helped design one of them at the University of Wisconsin. [Dr. Code]: Radiation that comes to us from celestial objects spans the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from the long radio waves through the infrared and visible light, into the X-ray and gamma-ray region. The Wisconsin telescopes are designed to observe in the ultraviolet region beyond the range of visibility of the eye. Space contains not only many old stars like our Sun, a few billion years old, but young, blue stars only a few hundred thousand of years of age. These young hot stars give off most of their light in the ultraviolet, a region which does not penetrate the Earth's filtering atmosphere. The Wisconsin telescopes will be able to see these hot young stars. They will measure the energy distribution and the intensity of light from young stars, something never-before possible. From these studies and more, we hope learn more about how stars are born, age, and die, and how matter is reborn into the universe. [Narrator]: This telescope was invented in the 17th century by Monsieur Cassegrain. Medieval. But a modern version will aid man's knowledge of space. Dr. James Kupperian of the Goddard Space Flight Center has, with the help of other NASA astronomers, devised a new way to use Cassegrain's ancient telescope. [Dr. Kupperian]: The Goddard Telescope system has been developed by us to explore ultraviolet radiation of stars, in a manner somewhat similar to that of the Wisconsin telescopes. The emphasis, however, is on increased spectral resolution. With the Goddard telescope in space, we can sample radiations emitted from within our own galaxy and compare them to emissions from galaxies tens of millions of light-years distant. It's an exciting prospect. With the OAO man will go a long way toward solving the mystery of the creation of matter. [Narrator]: Through our new window on the universe, we shall search the stars in many ways. An early project will be the mapping of the entire sky by ultraviolet light. In charge of making this unique celestial map is Dr. Fred Whipple. [Dr. Whipple]: The new map of the universe, which will be very different from these maps, will be made by a celescope. With four such ground-controlled telescopic cameras, we intend to make an all-sky map in four separate ultraviolet colors. In addition, we plan to catalog more than 30,000 very hot stars much brighter than the Sun, many times more than astronomers have previously recorded in the ultraviolet. [Narrator]: Among other objects, an ultraviolet map of the sky will study pockets of interstellar gas and dust clouds. Some are dark, some almost invisible from Earth. These vast clouds in space may hold clues as to how stars are born. An OAO project, developed in the space telescope program of Princeton University, will investigate these provocative dark areas. Dr. Donald Morton describes it. [Dr. Morton]: This telescope can be used for many different kinds of observations, but at Princeton, we have a particular study in mind. Not all clouds are as dark as this one in Orion, but it is apparent that the space between the stars in not empty, but filled with great clouds of dust and gas. As starlight travels towards us, the atoms in these clouds absorb part of the spectrum. By observing these areas in ultraviolet light with our spectrometer, it's possible to deduce the density and chemical composition of the interstellar gas. All the telescope packages will be working in the same range of wavelengths, but there will be a difference in the sharpness of resolution. For example, the Smithsonian and Wisconsin telescopes will take the initial broad approach, with low-resolution studies, in bands 500-10 angstroms wide. The Goddard telescope will examine this same radiation with medium resolution. in bands from 10 angstroms down to 1. And for the Princeton package, there remains high resolution, down to one-twentieth of an angstrom. Astronomers have long believed that new stars are formed by the condensation of interstellar gas and dust. With our OAO, we hope to determine the density and chemical composition of this tenuous material and then we may be able to better understand the process of star formation. [Narrator]: This satellite, the OAO, is the biggest and most complex unmanned satellite in the NASA program. Built by the Grumman Aircraft Corporation, it is basically a shell, into which various kinds of telescopes can be mounted. When it has been placed in an orbit 500 miles beyond the Earth, this space observatory will gives us eyes to see into regions until now invisible to man. [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music][Rocket launch sound] [Rocket launch sound] Launched by a Centaur rocket, the OAO sheds its protective fairings in space. [Music] The OAO powers itself through solar panels, storing electrical energy derived from sunlight. Once in orbit, it relies on solar sensors and star trackers to stabilize itself. Then, it opens its eyes to look through a new window in the universe. With each succeeding year, a new OAO will be orbited, the first one in space carries telescope packages in both ends. From a ground control station, men reach into space 500 miles to point the OAO toward any part of the sky they wish to study. Precision is such that the OAO could fix on the eraser of pencil 100 miles away. Observations can be stored by magnetic memory, and all information flashed to Earth within seconds. Recorded as numerical data, starlight images can be translated into pictures by the trained scientists. The OAO will be another significant advance in astronomy since Galileo aimed the first telescope to prove the Earth was not the center of the universe. From the time when prehistoric man wondered at the bright pin points in the sky, astronomy has developed as a challenge. The OAO, the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory, will extend man's range of vision across the universe. Man, on his tiny planet -- a sand grain on the shoreline of the seas of infinity -- longs to find out what the stars are, why they are there, how they came to be there, vast, in the immensities of space, that may or may not, have a beginning or an end. [Music] [Produced by Film Graphics, Inc.][Music] [Music] [Music]
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